Kramnik-Leko, Anand-Kasparov Drawn. Leko Takes Title

3/9/2003 – According to the traditional Linares tiebreak system of 'fewest draws,' Peter Leko has won his first title of Linares champion! His game with Kramnik was a solid draw and both players finished with 7/12. Anand and Kasparov drew and finished 3-4 with 6.5/12. Ponomariov won against Vallejo. Report and games here.

Linares
2003 ended with a whimper, not a bang. The games between the leaders and
the chasers were both drawn. Kramnik and Leko played an extremely correct draw
with few flourishes but were polite enough to the audience to play down to a
dead drawn endgame. Both Leko and Kramnik finished on +2 to tie for first place
in Linares 2003. Congratulations to both players!

Peter Leko will get the title and the trophy (left,
representing the mining tradition of Linares) on tiebreaks, and he definitely
deserves more than a pat on the back for his energetic performance. Twice
he was knocked down and twice he got back up to win, showing the heart of a
champion. The Hungarian was the motor of the tournament throughout.

Combined with his impressive triumph in Dortmund last year it
might be time to start talking about the big four instead of the big three we
have had for so many years. And Leko, whose name was becoming synonymous with
"draw", took the title on a "fewest draws" tiebreak system!
This might even be Leko 3.0, or maybe Leko XP. Leko Linux?!

Vladimir Kramnik played the ideal Kramnik tournament. A
few years ago I nicknamed him "Mr. Plus Two" and that's just what
he was in Linares this year. Two powerful wins and 10 draws. This is exactly
what he scored in Linares 2000, when he shared first place with Kasparov. Usually
+2 is not enough to win a tournament with Anand and Kasparov in it, but this
time it was. Going undefeated in 12 games against this field is a remarkable
achievement by Kramnik even if his +2 was a lot less exciting than Leko's!

Viswanathan Anand deserved better, what else can you say?
He won three games and both his losses were quite avoidable. Anand lost one-and-a-half
points in endgames and still scored +1. Garry Kasparov shared a similar fate,
letting several excellent positions turn into draws. It's hard not to think
that the second-round loss from a winning position against Radjabov really rocked
him. Kasparov pushed very hard to get a win in the final rounds, but it was
not to be. Anand and Kasparov did not play with the confidence we are used to
seeing from them. Only a half-point separated the top four and you need every
ounce of skill, will, and magic to break out in such a tough field.

This was the end of one of the greatest chess streaks of all
time, in my opinion. From Corus Wijk aan Zee 1999 to Linares 2002, Kasparov
won 10 consecutive supertournaments. (Just one shared first.) Ten! It is also
worth noting that much of the chat you hear now about Kasparov's age is exactly
what some people were saying right before that streak started after he finished
third in Linares 1998!

Ruslan Ponomariov finished with a sweep of Vallejo to swap
places with him in the standings and salvage a few rating points, although he
still ended with his second consecutive negative score. Even that last-round
loss couldn't ruin things for Francisco Vallejo Pons, for whom this was
still a successful event. He failed to improve on his 5/12 score of last year,
however. Teimour Radjabov's tournament was all downhill after his stunning
win over Kasparov, but it was a high height from which to fall. It will take
a few years of work to get his opening repertoire up to Linares standards, but
he can clearly compete on this level on sheer talent alone.

The winners drew both their games against each other.

Kramnik-Leko was an exercise in creative piece exchanges that
was sucked inexorably down the draw drain despite a couple of tactics. Kramnik
offered a piece sacrifice that was introduced by Sutovsky last year but Leko
wisely declined. Both players who accepted the sac, including Sutovsky's opponent
Smirin, were wiped out in spectacular fashion. After that brief flirtation with
excitement the pieces came off quickly.

Kasparov played my dear Accelerated Dragon for possibly the first
time in his career in a serious game. As so often happens they ignored recommended
lines for a 9.h3 Na5 sideline. It transposed into tame Dragon lines with
both kings on the kingside. Kasparov played very aggressively by pushing his
e and f-pawns forward and sacrificing a pawn. It looked like Black might have
a little something with his two bishops, but Anand's precise play defused the
position to reach an opposite-colored bishops ending without prospects.

Vallejo misplayed an endgame that should have been drawn with
little fanfare. Ponomariov ended up netting a pawn and won the usually tough
R+4 vs R+3 very quickly. It was fitting that the final game of Linares 2003
was yet another theoretical endgame!

Some interesting facts can be gleaned from the final crosstable.
In the games between the top four, Kramnik and Leko scored even, Kasparov +1,
and Anand -1. Kramnik, Leko, and Anand all beat Radjabov but Kasparov lost to
him. (This reminds me of Astana, 2001. Everybody else pounded 'outsider' Sadvakasov
but he drew both his games with Kasparov! Does he play down to them or do they
play up?) Vallejo had an even score against the big four (!) while Ponomariov
was -3 against them.

Photos and comments from the final press conference are coming
soon. Thanks to everyone who followed our daily coverage here at ChessBase.com
and the live games at Playchess.com! You can download all the games in PGN format
here in one file. Most have
light variations and supplementary games and lines from the ChessBase Megabase.

See also

3/31/2003 – Instability and weak nerves have been playing tricks on Vassily Ivanchuk ever since his youth. If he were able to control himself, many experts think he would have become world champion. In the Supertorneo he took the first prize here three times. Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam describes this remarkable personality in our illustrated book review.Discuss

3/20/2003 – Why does Vassily Ivanchuk have trouble praying when he is thinking of God? Was Gata Kamsky's orange juice really poisoned? Was it a coincidence that general Juan Perea's son got married on the day Manolete was killed in the Linares bullring? Nadja Woisin searches for the answers in her review of a remarkable book by Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam.Discuss

Discuss

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